Download the entire issue in PDF format here
Editorial A Park in Nanjing By Kenneth I. Werner
My Turn LCD Panels Need More Class By Alfred Poor
OLED Excitement Phosphorescent-OLED technology, with its high luminous efficiency, is the key to OLED penetration of the display and lighting markets, and in other markets as well. By Mike Hack and Julie J. Brown
AMOLED Backplanes: Amorphous-Silicon vs. Polysilicon Choosing between amorphous-silicon and low-temperature-polysilicon backplanes for active-matrix OLEDs is critical- and not easy. By Jiin-Jou Lih
Long-Term Value Growth of Display Technologies The market value of newer display technologies is growing faster than the CRT's market value did, and that bodes well for the industry's future. By Kimberly Allen
Improving the Moving-Image Quality of LCDs by Using Impulse Driving New cell designs, LC materials, and overdrive technology have improved the response time of LCDs substantially, but more work is needed to minimize the blurring of moving images. By Jun-ichi Ohwada
Large-Screen TV Fuels Record Attendance at CES The world's largest PDP TV and the world's thinnest rear-projection TV drew crowds at the Consumer Electronics Show, but nothing excited the industry professionals more than rapidly increasing digital-TV sales. By Ken Werner
Sustaining Members
Index to Advertisers
Backlight Twenty Years a PC Curmudgeon By David Lieberman